- Iniquity
- Today's Word
Iniquity
Iniquity
ih-NIK-wih-teeDefinition
(noun) Gross injustice or wickedness; a deeply immoral act or condition that violates fundamental principles of right and wrong.Example
The report documented decades of iniquity — not isolated lapses in judgment but a systematic, deliberate pattern of harm that had been protected at every level.Word Origin

Iniquity derives from the Latin iniquitas, meaning “unevenness” or “injustice” — built from in- (“not”) and aequus (“equal” or “just”). The same root aequus gives us equity, equal, and adequate — making iniquity the precise negation of fairness and balance. It entered English in the 14th century through Old French, used predominantly in religious and moral contexts to describe sin and wickedness before expanding into its broader legal and ethical sense of profound injustice.
Fun FactThe Den of Iniquity — a phrase so embedded in English that it has become almost a cliché — has a surprisingly specific origin. In Victorian England, moral reformers used the phrase to describe the gin houses, gambling dens, and brothels of London’s East End, producing pamphlets with titles so lurid they guaranteed readership. The campaign was partly genuine moral concern and partly a class-coded attack on working-class leisure — the same activities conducted in private clubs by wealthy men attracted no equivalent outrage. The phrase outlasted the campaign by centuries, which is how language tends to preserve the anxieties of eras that no longer exist.
Today's Popular Words
Iniquity
- Today's Word
Iniquity
ih-NIK-wih-tee
Definition
(noun) Gross injustice or wickedness; a deeply immoral act or condition that violates fundamental principles of right and wrong.
Example
The report documented decades of iniquity — not isolated lapses in judgment but a systematic, deliberate pattern of harm that had been protected at every level.
Word Origin
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Iniquity derives from the Latin iniquitas, meaning “unevenness” or “injustice” — built from in- (“not”) and aequus (“equal” or “just”). The same root aequus gives us equity, equal, and adequate — making iniquity the precise negation of fairness and balance. It entered English in the 14th century through Old French, used predominantly in religious and moral contexts to describe sin and wickedness before expanding into its broader legal and ethical sense of profound injustice.
Fun Fact
The Den of Iniquity — a phrase so embedded in English that it has become almost a cliché — has a surprisingly specific origin. In Victorian England, moral reformers used the phrase to describe the gin houses, gambling dens, and brothels of London’s East End, producing pamphlets with titles so lurid they guaranteed readership. The campaign was partly genuine moral concern and partly a class-coded attack on working-class leisure — the same activities conducted in private clubs by wealthy men attracted no equivalent outrage. The phrase outlasted the campaign by centuries, which is how language tends to preserve the anxieties of eras that no longer exist.
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